40 N.Y.S. 779 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
At common law the father was under no legal liability to support his bastard child, and the liability which he is now under was created and exists solely by virtue of the statutes. (Moncrief v. Ely, 19 Wend. 405; Birdsall v. Edgerton, 25 id. 619 ; Todd v. Weber, 95 N. Y. 181,189 ; 1 Burn’s Justice [13th ed.], 407.) The mother has no power at common law, or under the statutes of this State, to compel the father to support her during confinement, or to support the
The mother cannot institute a proceeding against the father nor the father against the mother, and in case a proceeding is instituted against either, by any one other than the officials authorized by the statutes, the magistrates acquire no jurisdiction. (Wallsworth v. M' Cullough, 10 Johns. 93; Sprague v. Eccleston, 1 Lans. 74; Rivenburgh v. Henness, 4 id. 208 ; People ex rel. Bd. of Charities v. Davis, 15 Hun, 209.)
In Rivenburgh v. Henness (supra) it ivas held that the officer who instituted the proceeding was a party to it, and in Stowell v. The Overseers of Volney (5 Den. 98) it was held that the officers instituting such a proceeding might discontinue it, in which case it was done in consideration of' eleven dollars paid by the defendant.
In case the officers, after instituting a proceeding against the father, fail to prosecute it by reason of a settlement, legal or illegal, made with the defendant, or for any cause, the mother cannot prosecute the proceeding, because the statute confers no power on her to do so, and for the same reason the father would have no power to carry on a prosecution legally instituted by the officers against the mother in case they should discontinue it for any cause. The father has no pecuniary claim on the mother nor the mother on the father in respect to a child born or likely to be born a bastard. Reitlier is a party to a proceeding instituted against the other, and neither has any right to conduct, control or prosecute a proceeding instituted against the other. In case a proceeding is instituted against the father and an adjudication is made against him, or if a proceeding is instituted against the mother and an adjudication is made against her, he or she may appeal from the adjudication made against him or her, as the case may be. (Code Crim. Proc. § 851 et seq.) But the mother cannot appeal from any order or adjudication made in a proceeding against the father, nor can the father appeal from any
We reach this conclusion without determining whether the board had power to make the settlement which was made in this case.
The learned county judge correctly decided the motion, and the order of the County Court should be affirmed.
All concurred.
Order affirmed.